Flicks.co.nz

Shirkers

There are movers, there are shakers, and there are shirkers.

Documentary memoir detailing young Singaporeans, the indie movie they made, and how it mysteriously disappeared. Winner of the World Cinema Documentary Directing Award at Sundance 2018.... More

Three teenagers who bonded over a love of underground music and film graduated to making a film of their own, a 1992 cult classic-in-the-making. Or it would have been, explains Sandi Tan in this doco about the film of the same name she wrote and starred in, if every frame of the 16mm footage hadn't gone missing. Decades later, Tan once again sets out to find out what happened.Hide

Winner of World Cinema Documentary Directing Award at Sundance Film Festival 2018

YOUR RATING & REVIEW

The Reviews

On Demand, DVD & Blu-Ray

Available from 1 providers

Flicks Review

Tracing the making of a pioneering—and lost—independent film shot in Singapore in 1992, Shirkers is a fascinating blend of autobiography, cinema history and mystery. The ambitious project of young Singaporeans, led by a trio of determined women working alongside an older, American, film teacher (more on him later), independent feature Shirkers evolved out of a shared love of indie film, zine culture and alternative music—much of it smuggled into the culturally authoritarian nation. Then, as the 1992 film’s screenwriter and lead actor Sandi Tan details in this documentary, their movie just… disappeared.... More

Anyone who’s shared a love for underground, unappreciated, or unfashionable music and film with others will relate to the passion Tan and her friends developed, a shared, almost secretive, collectively-experienced cultural coming-of-age—one that, given where they lived, meant overcoming challenges in accessing content unthinkable in the online era. Finding a mentor in American ex-pat Georges Cardona, they eventually set out to make their own artistic statement with Cardona, in a sign of things to come, overtly asserting authority to install himself as director.

Like many long-standing friendships, a quarter century later certain dynamics persist. Would-be Shirkers editor Jasmine Ng forthrightly accuses Tan of being an asshole, challenging her ego in ways that viewers may find themselves nodding along with; producer Sophie Siddique understates how much work and talent on her part would have actually gone into realising Tan’s vision.

Throughout, tantalising glimpses of the 1992 feature are seen, and the same is true of Cardona’s presence. We’re largely left to draw our own conclusions about what he sought from his relationship with these youngsters and unpicking the power dynamics at play. That is, until decades later when Tan picks up the trail once more to find out what happened to her mysteriously missing movie, as well as Cardona. Like the film itself, Cardona hadn’t been seen since they parted ways at the conclusion of principal photography.

As the documentary slides towards true crime territory, another fascinating layer is unveiled that bolsters this memoir, and adds another dimension that you’re likely to find yourself discussing with fellow viewers in detail both throughout and long after the film comes to a close.Hide